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Team USA trailed for half the game but was awoken by Kyle Schwarber’s mammoth go-ahead home run in an eventual 9-1 win against Great Britain in the World Baseball Classic.

The Americans improved to 2-0 in pool play and has the day off Sunday before facing Mexico at Daikin Park in Houston.

Britain’s Nate Eaton led off the game with a solo home run off back-to-back Cy Young winner Tarik Skubal and Team USA was unable to push a run across until Ernie Clement scored on a wild pitch to tie things 1-1 in the bottom of the fifth. 

Schwarber followed with his two-run homer to put the U.S. ahead for good, the latest electrifying longball for the Phillies slugger who hit 56 home runs last season.

Britain falls to 0-2 in Pool B and faces Italy on Sunday.

Gunnar Henderson went 4-for-5 with 2 RBIs for Team USA and Clay Holmes picked up the win, striking out six in three scoreless innings after taking over from Skubal in the fourth.

Here’s how the game unfolded:

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USA adds three more, leads 8-1

The Americans sent nine batters to the plate in the bottom of the sixth and plated three more runs to seemingly put the game out of reach for Britain, which hasn’t scored since Nate Eaton led off the game with a homer.

Gunnar Henderson gives Team USA a cushion

After Kyle Schwarber’s home run put them in front 3-1, the Americans loaded the bases with two outs. Gunnar Henderson laced a double that scored two runs to extend Team USA’s lead to 5-1 through five innings.

Kyle Schwarber home run puts USA in front

Team USA finally got on the board when Ernie Clement scored on Andre Scrubb’s wild pitch – having reached base via a throwing error earlier in the fifth inning. Kyle Schwarber stepped to the plate and did what he did best, destroying a cutter from Scrubb into the upper bleachers in right field, giving the Americans a 3-1 lead.

Najer Victor strikes out five MVP awards

Najer Victor replaced starter Tyler Viza on the mound for Britain in the fourth, and the 24-year-old Angels prospect proceeded to strike out Aaron Judge (three MVPs) and Bryce Harper (two). Victor walked Will Smith with two outs but whiffed Gunnar Henderson with a slider to end an eight-pitch battle to end the frame.

Victor had a 4.87 ERA in 35 relief appearances in Single-A last season.

Tarik Skubal done after three, Clay Holmes in for USA

Tarik Skubal gave up a home run on his first pitch of the night but retired nine of the next 10 batters including five strikeouts and is being replaced by right-hander Clay Holmes to start the fourth inning after 41 pitches.

This is the only appearance Skubal is making in the 2026 World Baseball Classic, planning to return to spring training with the Tigers after the game against Great Britain.

Holmes retired all three batters he faced in the top of the fourth.

Trayce Thompson robs Will Smith

With one out in the bottom of the second Team USA catcher drove an offering from Tyler Viza to the right field wall, but outfielder Trayce Thompson made an epic leaping catch to keep Britain ahead.

Thompson, the younger brother of NBA star Klay Thompson, has played 369 MLB games over seven seasons since his debut in 2015, mostly reecently appearing in the majors in 2023.

Tarik Skubal settles in

After giving up a home run on his first pitch of the night, Tarik Skubal only needed 20 more to retire the next six Britain hitters. The Tigers’ back-to-back Cy Young winner has racked up a pair of strikeouts through the first two innings.

Nate Eaton home run leads off for Team GB

Leading off the game against reigning Cy Young winner Tarik Skubal, Nate Eaton crushed a ball to left-center that was initially have ruled to have hit the wall. A review overturned the call on the field, giving Eaton a solo home run and the Brits an unlikely 1-0 lead.

Eaton, 29, made his MLB debut in 2022 and has played 113 games across three seasons with the Royals and Red Sox.

USA lineup tonight vs Britain

Starter: LHP Tarik Skubal – Tigers

  1. Kyle Schwarber, DH – Phillies
  2. Alex Bregman, 3B – Cubs
  3. Aaron Judge, RF – Yankees
  4. Bryce Harper, 1B – Phillies
  5. Will Smith, C – Dodgers
  6. Gunnar Henderson, SS – Orioles
  7. Roman Anthony, LF – Red Sox
  8. Ernie Clement, 2B – Blue Jays
  9. Pete Crow‑Armstrong, CF – Cubs

Great Britain lineup tonight

Starter: RHP Tyler Viza

  1. Nate Eaton, CF
  2. Jazz Chisholm Jr., 2B
  3. Harry Ford, C
  4. BJ Murray, 1B
  5. Kristian Robinson, LF
  6. Ivan Johnson, 3B
  7. Justin Wylie, DH
  8. Trayce Thompson, RF
  9. Ian Lewis Jr., SS

Tarik Skubal stats

  • 2025: 13-6, 2.21 ERA, 31 GS, 195.1 IP, 241 SO, 0.89 WHIP – AL Cy Young winner
  • 2024: 18-4, 2.39 ERA, 31 GS, 192.0 IP, 228 SO, 0.92 WHIP – AL Cy Young winner
  • 2023: 7-3, 2.80 ERA, 15 GS, 80.1 IP, 102 SO, 0.90 WHIP
  • 2022: 7-8, 3.52 ERA, 21 GS, 117.2 IP, 117 SO, 1.16 WHIP
  • 2021: 8-12, 4.34 ERA, 29 GS, 149.1 IP, 164 SO, 1.26 WHIP
  • 2020: 1-4, 5.63 ERA, 7 GS, 32.0 IP, 37 SO, 1.22 WHIP

USA World Baseball Classic schedule 2026

  • March 6: United States 15, Brazil 5
  • March 7: USA vs. Great Britain
  • March 9: USA vs. Mexico
  • March 10: USA vs. Italy
  • Quarterfinals: March 13 and 14
  • Semifinals: March 15 and 16 in Miami
  • Championship game: March 17 in Miami

Team USA WBC roster 2026

Catchers

  • Cal Raleigh (Mariners)
  • Will Smith (Dodgers)

Infielders

  • Bryce Harper (1B, Phillies)
  • Paul Goldschmidt (1B, Yankees)
  • Brice Turang (2B, Brewers)
  • Alex Bregman (3B, Cubs)
  • Bobby Witt Jr. (SS, Royals)
  • Gunnar Henderson (SS, Orioles)
  • Ernie Clement (UTIL, Blue Jays)

Outfielders

  • Aaron Judge (Captain, Yankees)
  • Corbin Carroll (Diamondbacks)
  • Pete Crow-Armstrong (Cubs)
  • Byron Buxton (Twins)
  • Roman Anthony (Red Sox)
  • Kyle Schwarber (Phillies)

Pitchers

  • Logan Webb (Giants)
  • Tarik Skubal (Tigers)
  • Paul Skenes (Pirates)
  • Nolan McLean (Mets)
  • Clay Holmes (Mets)
  • Michael Wacha (Royals)
  • Matthew Boyd (Cubs)
  • Mason Miller (Padres)
  • David Bednar (Yankees)
  • Clayton Kershaw (Retired)
  • Griffin Jax (Rays)
  • Garrett Whitlock (Red Sox)
  • Ryan Yarbrough (Yankees)
  • Gabe Speier (Mariners)
  • Garrett Cleavinger (Rays)
  • Brad Keller (Phillies)

World Baseball Classic predictions

Pick for championship game and tournament MVP

  • Bob Nightengale: USA over Japan / Aaron Judge MVP
  • Gabe Lacques: Japan over USA / Shohei Ohtani
  • Jesse Yomtov: Japan over USA / Yoshinobu Yamamoto
  • Steve Gardner: USA over Dominican Republic / Bobby Witt Jr.

WBC Pool C schedule

  • March 7: Great Britain vs. United States
  • March 8: Great Britain vs. Italy
  • March 8: Brazil vs. Mexico
  • March 9: Brazil vs. Great Britain
  • March 9: Mexico vs. United States
  • March 10: Italy vs. United States
  • March 11: Italy vs. Mexico

How to watch USA vs Great Britain: TV channel, WBC stream

  • Time: 8 p.m. ET
  • TV channel: Fox
  • Live stream: FoxSports.com / Fubo
This post appeared first on USA TODAY

With the main event of UFC 326 underway, Paramount+ suffered a knockout.

When its own feed apparently went down.

The fight between Max Holloway and Charles Oliveira was headed to the third round when the livestream went dark for about two minutes.

When the livestream resumed for most, it was about two minutes into the third round.

Paramount did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Combat sports figures sounded off on social media:

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

John Spytek has plenty of work to do to get the Las Vegas Raiders’ house in order before Fernando Mendoza’s likely arrival.

Without specifically naming the Heisman Trophy winner and expected No. 1 pick in this year’s NFL draft, the general manager ruminated at the NFL scouting combine last week about all the building blocks that would be nice to have in place ahead of a rookie quarterback’s selection.

‘I think you want to limit the amount of pressure you have on that guy from the start,’ Spytek said. ‘ … Obviously a great offensive line, a run game – all the things that can limit his chances to really get killed. And a great defense, too, because if he doesn’t have to go out there and feel like he has to score 35 points every week, I think that’s helpful.’

So … about all that …

After agreeing Friday night to trade five-time Pro Bowl defensive end Maxx Crosby to the Baltimore Ravens, the Raiders have unparalleled resources to shift their long-term fortunes. Not only does Las Vegas now boast 11 picks in the 2026 NFL Draft, but the team also boosted its league-high spending capacity to $121.7 million, according to Over The Cap.

Yet for all the transformative potential awaiting the franchise in the next seven weeks, the move also entrenched the Silver and Black as having the league’s least settled roster entering NFL free agency next week. And after last year’s attempted return to relevance went off the rails, Spytek and co-owner Tom Brady still have to prove that they can assemble the proper pieces for a rather imposing build ahead.

Brady in particular needs to make the same kind of Year 2 leap in the personnel world as he did in the broadcasting booth.

While it’s far too early to judge last year’s draft class, it’s clear that Spytek and Brady’s first offseason at the helm of an NFL franchise was an abject disaster. Brady, per The Athletic, resisted the idea of signing Sam Darnold, who would go on to win Super Bowl 60 with the Seattle Seahawks. The Raiders’ trade for Geno Smith initially inspired some hope for the new regime to at least establish some baseline competency, but the veteran signal-caller would go on to pace the NFL in interceptions (17) and sacks taken (55). No. 6 overall pick Ashton Jeanty was left with little room to run in a disappointing rookie campaign, and the team’s other first-year players also struggled to find their way.

That dynamic led to the ouster of head coach Pete Carroll after just one year, with the organization taking on yet another full-scale reset. In shipping off Crosby – whose performance and dedication set a bar no one else in the organization even approached – the Raiders have torn their defense down to the studs. And while Spytek and Brady have additional ammo to bolster Mendoza’s supporting cast on offense, the quarterback might frequently find himself in the kind of high-scoring affairs in which his team will be ill-suited to keep pace.

And the Raiders have plenty of experience in getting burned by splashy offseason moves, too.

Spending on big names has never been an issue for the team, which has whiffed on the likes of Christian Wilkins, Chandler Jones and Jimmy Garoppolo, among others. Yet its draft track record is even more ghastly than its forays into free agency. Former general manager Mike Mayock’s whiffs in 2020 (Henry Ruggs III, Damon Arnette) and 2021 (Clelin Ferrell, Josh Jacobs, Johnathan Abram) serve as a reminder that having multiple first-round picks hardly guarantees securing difference-makers. And perhaps no other organization has gotten less out of its many top-100 picks than Mark Davis’ crew.

So where do Brady and Spytek go from here, and how does the Crosby trade alter any plans in the offseason? Let’s take a look:

Raiders’ NFL free agency plan: Which top players should they be in on?

With needs across the board, expect the Raiders to be linked to just about every big name on the open market. Two, however, stand out above the rest: Center Tyler Linderbaum and wide receiver Alec Pierce.

Linderbaum, the top true free agent on Nate Davis’ top 100 rankings, should command a market-setting payout after earning his third consecutive Pro Bowl nod last season for the Baltimore Ravens. Some teams might not be inclined to splurge at this position, but equipping Mendoza with a savvy pivot could be one of the fastest ways to ease his acclimation to the NFL. There are plenty of weak links along the Raiders’ line, so a double-dip on high-priced veterans might be necessary.

Pierce, meanwhile, looks on track to earn a sizable sum after leading the NFL in yards per catch for the second consecutive year. His proven downfield ability would surely be captivating to an offense that couldn’t open things up amid the pervasive protection problems. But he also figures to drive a serious bidding war, and the Raiders will have to consider what price point they’re comfortable with. Reuniting first-year coach Klint Kubiak with speedster Rashid Shaheed could also be a consideration. But with another early pick in the fold, the Raiders might not need to be quite so aggressive here.

Will the Raiders look to sign a big name on the edge now that Crosby is gone? Replacing him with a free-agent signing is impossible, but there are some intriguing options for a front seven with a serious lack of juice. Jaelan Phillips would be the most enticing possibility, and Las Vegas could afford to pay a premium for an immensely talented 26-year-old. With the defense switching to a 3-4, Odafe Oweh and Boye Mafe also could provide a spark.

There’s no position on defense where the Raiders could wave off additional help, so with Crosby gone, it could be even more important for the team to bring in a few solid starters.

And while the team’s future will be built through the draft, hitting the right notes in free agency is critical for creating the kind of framework for success that last year’s rookies lacked.

Raiders’ NFL draft picks: Where might team turn after Crosby trade?

With the No. 14 overall pick now in hand, the Raiders could be in prime position to address the aforementioned sore spots at receiver and along the offensive line.

USA TODAY Sports’ latest NFL mock draft has Las Vegas going with USC wide receiver Makai Lemon. He certainly would be a sensible weapon to pair with tight end Brock Bowers, as would Arizona State’s Jordyn Tyson. And the possibility of reuniting Mendoza with Indiana receiver Omar Cooper Jr. surely will at least be a talking point.

But if the Raiders still feel unsatisfied up front entering the draft, they might find a solution early on. The team could be poised to pounce if Miami’s Francis Mauigoa or Utah’s Spencer Fano falls, with either player coming in handy at either right tackle or guard. Meanwhile, Penn State’s Olaivavega Ioane could solidify a shaky interior and would hardly be out of place going No. 14 overall.

Any fill-in for Crosby, however, could be hard to come by. The top three edge rushers – Arvell Reese, David Bailey and Rueben Bain Jr. – all should be gone by the time the Raiders’ second pick comes up, and there might not be a worthwhile alternative at that point in the draft. Oklahoma’s R. Mason Thomas, Missouri’s Zion Young and Illinois’ Gabe Jacas all could be of interest on Day 2.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Puerto Rico and Panama needed extra innings to decide the winner of their Pool A World Baseball Classic matchup on Saturday.

Darell Hernáiz made the difference in Puerto Rico’s 4-3 victory with a walk-off home run against Severino Gonzalez.

Hernáiz faced a 1-2 count with two outs in the bottom of the 10th inning before sending the ball to left field.

Panama built a 2-0 lead in the fifth inning before Puerto Rico answered with runs in the sixth and ninth innings to tie the game at 2-2.

Panama added another run in the 10th inning to take the lead for a second time before PR added a pair of runs in the bottom of the inning, capped by Hernáiz’s blast.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

HOUSTON — Sam Aldegheri, still in his Team Italy uniform hours after he came out of the game, simply wasn’t ready to take it off Saturday afternoon.

He has pitched 95 games throughout his eight-year pro career — 79 games in the minors, seven in the major leagues for the Los Angeles Angels, and nine in the Italian League — but has never felt like this.

Aldegheri, the first player to be born and raised in Italy to reach the major leagues, put on one of the most dazzling pitching performances in World Baseball Classic pool history, suffocating Brazil’s lineup in an 8-0 victory.

He pitched 4⅔ shutout innings, only the second pitcher to pitch into the fifth inning in WBC pool play this year, striking out eight batters and allowing just one hit.

Sure, he has had better performances in his career, but never one more meaningful.

“It’s different,’’ Aldegheri said. “Play for your country is something that you can’t really explain, but you can feel it, feel all the support from back home. It’s amazing.’’

The nerves began when he awoke, knowing what this meant for his country, and he became emotional standing in the bullpen and listening to the Italian national anthem.

“I had goosebumps all over my body,’’ he said. “It was chilling. … I was just feeling deep inside, I was just trying to think about the game.

“Those moments are hard. You have all these feelings back home, everything goes by your mind. So it was really cool.’’

This is a 24-year-old who was born in Verona, Italy, and the only baseball he watched as a kid was YouTube videos of Dodgers three-time Cy Young winner Clayton Kershaw. There were a few baseball fields near his house, and with his older brother, Mattia, a right-handed pitcher, he grew up as a left-handed pitcher on the baseball diamond instead of the soccer field.

He was discovered as a 15-year-old in a tournament in Spain by a Kansas City Royals scout, and in 2019, the Philadelphia Phillies believed in him enough to pay him a $210,000 signing bonus. Aldegheri, the son of a father who works in a glass factory and a mother who works in a bakery, went off to America to chase his dreams.

He has pitched mostly in the minors for teams called the BlueClaws and Pandas and Bees and Threshers, and was traded in 2024 to the Angels for closer Carlos Estevez. He has pitched in seven major-league games for the Angels.

He still believes in himself, still wants to be an inspiration, and knows his Saturday performance could resonate throughout all of Italy.

“I think the game is growing,’’ he said. “Back home in Italy, I have been in a lot of camps during the offseason working with kids, and I have seen a lot of experienced coaches trying to help the game to grow. …

“They are starting to do these academies every region, every city. I have seen a lot of kids, they start from 6 to 8. Hopefully next couple years we will have better technology, too, more sponsors hopefully come in and just try to get better.’’

Says Italy catcher Kyle Teel of the Chicago White Sox: “Doing what he does on the mound and throwing like he can, it just goes to show how big baseball is in Italy, and how baseball is a big part of Italian culture.’’

It’s not just Aldegheri, but everyone from Team Italy is doing their part to let the world know they have arrived on the baseball scene, and are having a blast doing it.

Their 2½ hour flight from Phoenix to Houston was like a comedy club, with even the major league players saying they have never seen anything like it. They took the mic, sang Italian songs, and danced in the aisles. “I’ve never seen anything like what happened on that plane,’’ Teel said. “Just Andrea Bocelli bumping on the speaker. Everyone singing it at the top of their lungs. Nobody sitting in their seats. It was unbelievable. So much fun.’’

Said Italy outfielder Dante Nori of the Philadelphia Phillies, who hit two homers: “I’ve never been on a flight like that. That was something really special to me. We were laughing, dancing, just having a great old time on there.

“Our bond is unreal.’’

They’re the only team that has an espresso machine in the dugout and they forced Nori to chug some espresso after each of his first two home runs, which he promptly spit out on the dugout floor. They even have parmesan cheese and olive oil in the dugout just in case someone needs a snack.

“The coffee machine is because in Italy we drink coffee about 20 times a day,’’ Italy manager Francisco Cervelli says. “It’s a tradition. You’re walking down the road. You see a coffee spot, get some coffee, then you chitchat, and then keep walking and do the same thing all over and over again.

“That’s how Italy is.’’

Pardon Nori if it takes him a little longer to get accustomed to that espresso tradition.

“I do not like coffee,’’ Nori says, “so it did not taste great. The first one, especially, I was like, ‘Ugh,’ but the second one, I kind of liked that one a little bit more.’’

Who knows, can Italy one day not just be a team that fills out a WBC tournament pool, but become a legitimate power?

“I am not naive in the fact that I am Italian-American, and we are trying to represent Italy in the right way,’’ Italy first baseman Vinnie Pasquantino of the Kansas City Royals says. “What we are trying to do is open the door for more guys to play. For more guys like Sam, more Italian-born major leaguers, more guys that can make a competitive team in this Classic.

“I think that’s the long-term goal, as long as the Classic keeps continuing, for this team to be full of pure-bred Italians. The goal is to open that door and show, ‘Hey, Italy has got some ball players and all you have to do is invest in them a little bit, just invest some time equity into them.’ ‘

And, on Saturday afternoon, you had to look no further than Aldegheri for proof what could lay ahead for Italian baseball.

Follow Nightengale on X: @Bnightengale

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Boom!

It turns out that Lamar Jackson dropped a bomb of a clue on Friday afternoon when he posted a meme on X of Denzel Washington uttering a signature line from “Training Day.”

Hours later, the stunning trade that sends All-Pro edge rusher Maxx Crosby to the Baltimore Ravens was revealed to the entire NFL universe. And it’s no wonder Jackson was seemingly so hyped to celebrate, ASAP.

Suddenly, one of the NFL’s biggest teases – for all the breathtaking splash plays and MVP seasons, collecting a ring has been so elusive for Jackson – is a lot more dangerous.  

Adding Crosby to the Ravens mix, which becomes official when the NFL’s new league year opens on Wednesday, is so much bigger than, say, supporting Jackson by landing a big-play receiver or some stud blocker. Sure, the two-time NFL MVP wouldn’t turn down more marquee weapons for his offense (sorry, not enough draft capital left now to deal for A.J. Brown), but with football being a team game and with so many other pieces in place, Crosby, 28, is the game-changer that adds a whole other layer to the Super Bowl expectations that have existed for several years now in the Charm City.

How many leads have the Ravens blown?

Over the past five years, Baltimore has blown an NFL-worst 16 games where it led in the final five minutes of the fourth quarter.

Yeah, finishing games has been a major problem. The gagging has been such a thing – including late-game meltdowns at Buffalo in Week 1 and against New England in Week 16 in 2025 – that it ultimately cost John Harbaugh his job. And while Jackson hardly brought his A-game during a string of playoff meltdowns that included as assortment of blunders by others, too, the blown leads have represented an even more consistent pattern. Like underachieving with an exclamation point.

That’s why Crosby – who played in one playoff game during seven seasons with the Raiders and, well, had two sacks in a Week 2 win in 2024 when Baltimore blew a 10-point fourth-quarter lead – brings so much promise with the cost of the two first-round picks that Ravens GM Eric DeCosta sent to Las Vegas.

He’s a finisher.

It’s one thing that Crosby addresses a need clearly documented on paper. New coach Jessie Minter inherits a unit that had the third-fewest sacks (30) in the NFL last season. With his third double-digit sack season in four years, Crosby had twice as many sacks in 2025 (10) than any Raven. The loss of all-pro defensive tackle Nnamdi Madubuike, who suffered a neck injury in Week 2, was undoubtedly a key factor for Baltimore, but this is deeper than that. Crosby brings the threat off the edge that the team has lacked for a long time.

Of course, having a stud on the front line has to make other defensive playmakers better. That applies to linebacker Roquan Smith and on the back end, with cornerback Marlon Humphrey and safety Kyle Hamilton part of an outfit that in 2025 ranked next-to-last in the NFL against the pass.

Baltimore’s defense, next to last? That seems so odd, given the tradition. Yet it has been apparent that the tradition has been a far cry from reality in recent years. Ray Lewis, Ed Reed, Terrell Suggs – stars of Ravens defenses from yesteryear – have been gone for so long that a generation of fans never saw them play.

But here’s why they were so special: The Ravens defense used to be that unit that rarely (if ever?) blew leads in crunch time. Instead, when given a lead, they closed out games. That’s what championship defenses do. That’s how tradition is formed. The identity was so profound – the Ravens once had such a bad-ass defense that they won the franchise’s first Super Bowl despite going five consecutive games that season without scoring a single offensive touchdown – it was so glaring that it was no longer there.

Maybe Crosby helps to restore at least some of that tradition. He certainly has the look of a player who would have fit in so well with Ray-Ray (Lewis), T-Sizzle (Suggs), Goose (aka Tony Siragusa) and the other Baltimore bullies.

When the Raiders told Crosby of their decision to deactivate him for the final two games last season – which might be extrapolated into a tanking effort to ensure getting the No. 1 pick overall in the upcoming draft, to be used undoubtedly on IU quarterback Fernando Mendoza – he responded by storming out of the team’s headquarters. Never mind that the Raiders were hurtling toward a 3-14 and would soon move on from Pete Carroll. Forget that his financial bottom line was secured with the then-record, three-year, $106.5 million extension signed last offseason. Cast aside the tender knee and other injuries he battled last season.

Pure and simple, Crosby reportedly got mad – he went ‘Madd Maxx,’ so to speak – because he wanted to play.

That reflects the intangible beneath the sack numbers and pressure rates and why it’s evident on top of just watching him play, I’m figuring Crosby has the heart of a throwback Raven. If he can hold up as a player who rarely comes off the field, and as a linchpin with the motor that has produced more fourth-quarter sacks than all but a handful of players since he came into the league, he could represent that proverbial missing link for a championship puzzle.

With dots that connect directly to Jackson, the team’s most important player and undisputed locker room leader. Imagine the lift that comes if the Ravens finally fielded a defense that can be counted on in crunch time.

Jackson can certainly envision it. Like boom.

Contact Bell at jbell@usatoday.com or follow on X: @JarrettBell

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Center Kristaps Porzingis is available to play tonight for the Golden State Warriors after missing time due to illness.

The Warriors traveled to the Paycom Center to play the Oklahoma City Thunder on Saturday, March 7 and Porzingis entered the game in the first quarter.

Warriors coach Steve Kerr expects Porzingis to play 15-20 minutes against OKC.

‘Probably somewhere in that range,’ Kerr told reporters before the game. ‘We’ll see how he’s feeling once he’s out on the court.’

Porzingis had not played since the Warriors’ 121-110 loss to the Boston Celtics on Feb. 19. He had 12 points in 17 minutes.

That was the only game he had played with the Warriors before Saturday. The Atlanta Hawks traded him to the Golden State Warriors on Feb. 5. The Warriors sent Jonathan Kuminga and Buddy Hield to Atlanta in return.

Porzingis played his last game for the Hawks in a 117-110 victory against the New Orleans Pelicans on Jan. 7. He had 13 points, three rebounds and two assists in 22 minutes played.

Kristaps Porzingis stats vs. Thunder

Porzingis has seven points and two rebounds in 11 minutes of play. He went 2-for-5 from the field and 3-for-6 from the free throw line. The Thunder lead the Warriors 73-65 with 8:12 left in the third quarter.

The USA TODAY app gets you to the heart of the news — fast.Download for award-winning coverage, crosswords, audio storytelling, the eNewspaper and more.

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SACRAMENTO, Calif. ― There’s only one way Shaqir O’Neal, son of NBA legend and Basketball Hall of Famer Shaquille O’Neal, could describe his senior season of college hoops at Sacramento State.

‘A movie,’ the 22-year-old starting forward told USA TODAY Sports.

O’Neal, who’s listed at 6-foot-8, 200-pounds, committed to Sacramento State last spring following his junior year at Florida A&M, a Historically Black College/University or HBCU.

The Sacramento State program sparked his interest after it was announced that former Sacramento Kings star Mike Bibby would take over as a first-year collegiate basketball head coach. He was Bibby’s first recruit.

A month after getting a commitment from O’Neal, high-profile guard Mikey Williams announced he’d transfer from UCF to join the Hornets. It got the ball rolling as they recruited players from all over the country, both high school and college, in a complete rehaul of the roster and coaching staff from the preceding year.

The spotlight on the university brought attention and several opinions. O’Neal and the Hornets hoops team have seen their share of wins and losses, particularly due to injuries, including two of their top scorers, Jeremiah Cherry and Williams, among others.

‘It’s been an unreal experience,’ O’Neal said. ‘Coach Bibby and his staff, they really care about the players, just on and off the court. They made sure they built that relationship with us early in the summer. It’s really been a movie with all the press and all this stuff. And haters and this and that. And the ups and downs. Us losing players to injuries, like it’s been real, it’s been crazy, but it’s been a great learning experience.’

The Hornets’ season hasn’t played out as they thought it would. Their injuries have led them to run with seven-or eight-man rotations. And despite a 10-4 record at home, Sacramento State hasn’t won a single game on the road at 0-16.

Overall, Sacramento State has a 10-20 overall record, including 6-12 in Big Sky Conference games.

‘It’s been unfortunate, but you know, that’s just the game,’ O’Neal said. ‘I’m blessed to be able to play and be out there. I can’t complain about anything, you know, I’m able to play this game, and that’s all I want to do.’

He added: ‘Not being able to have some of my teammates out there, you know, it’s been tough knowing how good we could have been with all of us together, and we’ve been really good with the guys we have. For us to be this good with only seven players is still very impressive.’

On his senior night, O’Neal was introduced with his parents, Shaunie Henderson and Shaq, who watched their son enjoy a blowout win against Idaho State, 83-65, in Sacramento State’s final home game of the season.

O’Neal dished a pair of assists and scored seven points. He cashed in a catch-and-shoot three, went airborne to guide an alley-oop pass from Romari Robinson in the basket after contact and hit a couple of free throws in 23 minutes.

March Madness continues as the Hornets take on the University of Idaho in the first round of the Big Sky Tournament in Boise, Idaho.

Still their hopes for a so-to-speak Cinderella season remain alive. Winner of the Big Sky tournament earns an automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament.

O’Neal and his HBCU basketball experience

A trip to the NCAA Tournament wouldn’t be a first for O’Neal. He was part of the Texas Southern University team in 2023 that lost 84-61 to Fairleigh Dickinson, although he hardly logged a minute of playing time.

O’Neal spent the majority of his collegiate career at an HBCU, playing his freshman and sophomore years at TSU before transferring to Florida A&M for his junior season, both a part of the Southwestern Athletic Conference.

He said it played a role in his decision to transfer to Sacramento State, aside from the Bibby hiring.

‘My decision to leave FAMU for Sac State was just that I was in the SWAC for a long time, my whole career,’ O’Neal said. ‘I was at a low-major D-1, the plan is to move up. My only offer, my best offer was Sac State. And it just worked out perfectly. Like, Mike Bibby is a legend. Who wouldn’t want to be coached by him? I just wanted to move up in competition.’

O’Neal saw firsthand the difference between low-major and mid-major colleges in comparing the different universities he’s attended.

‘FAMU was a great school, like the teachers, you could tell teachers and advisors, they really cared, and it was like a whole community,’ O’Neal said. ‘They just didn’t have lots of resources. We’re in Tallahassee, Florida, and there’ll be hurricanes that shut down school campus. There’d be leaks and stuff. So I say just the resources are different.’

He also pointed out the different campus sizes but from a basketball standpoint, O’Neal said it was much of the same with glaring differences between the schools and respective resources, adding that there’s ‘levels’.

‘The basketball experience, totally different. It’s like you can really tell from the definition of low major, mid major and high major, it’s there you can see it,’ he said. ‘Everything’s different. … Going back to the resources, here we have a nice gym, practice gym, this and that. Sometimes other schools, we didn’t have that. […]So, yeah, it is a big difference.’

For example, O’Neal also mentioned the comparison in how much gear and equipment players are allotted stating it was one bag of items for the season at previous schools, whereas now he gets a lot more.

O’Neal wasn’t highly touted as a three-star recruit coming out of Union Grove High School in McDonough, Georgia. However, all roads led to Texas Southern, as he had family ties at the university in head coach Johnny Jones, who coached his dad, Shaq, as an assistant coach at LSU.

‘I wasn’t really highly offered. I had a couple interests, and it was around the COVID-19 time. So it was pretty tough,’ O’Neal said. ‘I didn’t really get good or make a little noise until my senior year. With my offers. That was just, you know, the one that made sense the most was the closest to home, and coach Johnny Jones.’

O’Neal appeared in 41 games and started two for the Fighting Tigers. He averaged 1.5 points, 1.3 rebounds, 0.5 assists, 0.2 blocks and steals in 8.5 minutes per game.

After a conversation with Jones about his place on the team, they agreed that O’Neal should find another school to play at.

‘I wasn’t comfortable with the role I was in with the time I was there,’ O’Neal said. ‘I had to get up out of there, it was a mutual decision. No bad blood at all, because coach Jones is family. We just talked about it.’

His underusage led him to transfer to FAMU. Not to mention, the university signed a sponsorship deal with NBA superstar LeBron James, which meant O’Neal could rock the star’s Nikes.

‘At TSU I was Under Armor for three years straight, so I couldn’t wear any Nike,’ O’Neal said. ‘So that was also a problem. So when I got to wear LeBron’s, it was big. … And when the new Bron’s came out, we got the FAMU edition. It was great.’

He averaged 6.7 points, 3.4 rebounds, 0.8 assists, 0.5 steals, 0.5 blocks and 18.1 minutes per game during his junior year at FAMU. His shooting splits were 50% from the field and 37.5% from three. He started 17 of 29 games played.

Playing his senior year at Sacramento State

Under Bibby, he’s started and played all 30 games. He’s seen a slight drop in averages, yet similar numbers. In his senior season at Sacramento State, O’Neal has averaged 5.4 points, 3.2 rebounds, 0.6 assists, 0.5 steals and blocks in 19.3 minutes. He shoots 42% on field goals, including 34% from three.

‘I think I progressed really well,’ O’Neal said of his collegiate career. ‘Just gotten bigger. I feel like I’ve adapted more to the game of college basketball and trying to find my role.’

O’Neal is probably hardest on himself. He knows his numbers aren’t flashy and there’s room for improvement.

‘I think I started off the season not too well, and kind of picked up a little bit,’ he said. ‘I know I could do better. I could be playing better. So I say I did, all right, I did solid. … I’ve seen greatness, been around really good players, so I know what it takes, and I know what I’m capable of. I’ve shown, probably glimpses, but I know I could have played better than what is shown.’

That drive and determination from O’Neal is one of the things that Bibby admires about his first recruit.

‘I got a call from my buddies and asked if we’d take him? I said, ‘would he come here?’ He’s like, ‘yeah,” Bibby told USA TODAY Sports in a phone call. ‘I love former players’ kids. I mean, they got the pedigree in them, they got the blood in them. And a lot of these people don’t give those guys a chance, because they sometimes compare them to their fathers.’

Bibby and O’Neal’s dad, Shaq, used to have playoff battles against each other in the early 2000s between the Los Angeles Lakers and Sacramento Kings.

Bibby said he never would have thought, all these years later, he’d not only be coaching Shaq’s son but also be friends with him and team up to work alongside the legendary big man himself, who joined as a volunteer general manager a month after his son signed.

Bibby highlighted his will to do whatever the team needs to be successful, whether it’s playing all five positions on the floor.

‘We’ve had a lot of injuries, he’s kind of been playing out of position,’ the Hornets’ first-year coach said. ‘We’ve had to play him at the four, and he’s not a four, and so it’s kind of disrespectful to him. It’s like he’s doing what it takes for us, what we need. He’s a great kid, and we love what he does. … We’re putting the positions where he’s had to play a role for us that he’s probably never had to play before.’

O’Neal won the team’s dunk contest at the beginning of the season, to the surprise of his coach. Bibby was impressed with O’Neal’s underrated athleticism, noting that he wants him to use it more on the defensive end.

‘He’s really athletic, you know. I mean, he doesn’t like to show it,’ Bibby said. ‘He won our dunk contest. And I was like, ‘I didn’t know you could jump like that,’ like you have to go out there and use that. He’s one of the most athletic kids, if not, the most athletic kid we have on the team.’

Despite his genetically-gifted athleticism, noted by his teammate Williams, Bibby shared intangibles that O’Neal possesses that can help him get to the next level.

‘Just hard work,’ Bibby said. ‘He hasn’t missed a practice for us. Just the hard work he puts in. … He’s on time. Great charisma, great character, all-around good kid. I think he puts his time in and really puts the work in, he’ll be fine.’

And the feeling is mutual with O’Neal.

‘It’s been great,’ O’Neal said of playing under Bibby. ‘I feel like a lot of NBA dudes are the same, and because he reminds me of my dad a little bit. Just the way they roll and he’s just real. I’ve been a lot of I grew up around a couple older guys, so I just feel like, I get what he’s saying sometimes. He’s just a real guy. He’s just a real coach. What he says is real, realistic. And he’s just hard nose, hard working. He’s a dog.’

NBA dreams from a hoops home

O’Neal has hoop dreams. His earliest basketball memory is playing at a local YMCA in Orlando, Florida, when he was six.

He remembers watching his dad play, too. One of his favorite players is Kobe Bryant, particularly when he rocked the afro. It’s one of the reasons he’s worn the No. 8 throughout his college career.

In his next chapter, O’Neal wants to do other things outside of basketball, but absolutely wants to play in the NBA.

‘Just being in the NBA is a dream job. Just to play the game you love, on the biggest stage, at the highest level,’ O’Neal said. ‘Now, you’re getting crazy amounts of money for it.’

O’Neal knows what it takes, he wants to focus on ‘defense for sure’ he said.

‘Defense wins games, and it’s something that not everybody does,’ he said. ‘A lot of players, the best players undefined, but you got to do the little things stand out from the norm.’

O’Neal would be eligible for the 2026 NBA Draft, according to Real GM Basketball. However, O’Neal is not currently listed on any of the major publications’ draft boards or expected to be drafted in the first round.

O’Neal had a front row seat at all that goes into being a professional basketball player, let alone playing in the NBA. And he’s learned from the best.

His dad is a four-time NBA champion, three-time Finals MVP, league MVP, a 15-time All-Star and considered one of the greatest centers ever. That can be an insurmountable amount of pressure for anyone to overcome, but he was never pushed towards basketball, neither were his siblings.

‘My parents don’t put any pressure on me at all. My dad, he never has put any pressure on me to go to the league,’ O’Neal said. ‘When we told them we wanted to play, they were like, ‘alright, well, if you want to play, then be the best and work hard and you got to play hard.”

He added: ‘My dad is super cool, like, he’s had his career. He doesn’t care about basketball too much. He just tells me to play hard, play as hard as I can. And, you know, just be the best man I can. They’re not too worried about sports. They’re really more worried about how we are as people. … He’s pressured me and my siblings to be more of like, lawyers and some stuff like that, growing up.’

His siblings, as competitive as a bunch could be, also hoop.

His older brother, Shareef, played at UCLA, LSU and had a short G-League stint, although health setbacks ultimately stunted his career.

He said his other older brother, Myles, stopped playing at high school and is now a model and DJ, but was most competitive of all his siblings growing up, whether sports or even card games like UNO.

Then, there are his sisters, who also play ball, with the exception of older sister, Taahirah.

Older sister, Amirah, played at LSU and TSU while Shaqir played there. He said his younger sister, Me’arah, was also ultra-competitive growing up. Now, she is a sophomore at Florida, averaging 13.6 points, 6.4 rebounds and 1.1 assists on 52.9% shooting.

‘She’s really good. She’s going to the league,’ O’Neal said of Me’arah. ‘She’s really competitive, because me and my brother ‘Reef, we used to play with her and we’d beat her. And then my older sister Mimi, she was bigger when we were younger, so she’d like beat me up. So she was getting buckets too. So they are both really competitive.’

He added: ‘We made her a dawg, me and ‘Reef, I feel like, because we used to go at it.’

That ‘dawg’ is simply part of the O’Neal bloodline. It’s that same fire and competitiveness that tells Shaqir to keep going.

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The San Francisco 49ers have locked in their placekicker for the foreseeable future.

Eddy Piñeiro and the 49ers have agreed on a four-year, $17 million contract extension, his agents Drew Rosenhaus and Robert Bailey told ESPN Senior NFL insider Adam Schefter.

His contract includes a guaranteed $10 million, the agents told ESPN.

Piñeiro was set to become a free agent this week.

In his last game, Piñeiro scored the only points for San Francisco in their 41-6 blowout loss in the NFC Divisional Round to the eventual Super Bowl champion Seattle Seahawks. He went 2-for-2, connecting on 40- and 56-yard field-goals.

What to know about Eddy Piñeiro

Piñeiro is 30 years old. He signed with the Oakland Raiders as an undrafted free agent out of Florida in 2018, though he didn’t play for them because of injury.

Piñeiro was traded to the Chicago Bears and has also played for New York Jets and Carolina Panthers.

He joined the 49ers on a one-year deal in September 2025. That season, Piñeiro finished 28-for-29 on field goals and tied Nick Folk for best field goal percentage in the NFL at 96.6%. His only miss of the season was a 64-yard field goal attempt against the Colts that was just a few feet short, hitting the crossbar of the uprights.

His kicking accuracy surely will help the 49ers in the upcoming 2026 NFL season. The last time San Francisco had a placekicker this accurate was Robbie Gould from 2017 to 2022, which included a Super Bowl appearance.

Eddy Piñeiro career stats

Here are Eddy Piñeiro‘s career stats:

  • Field goals/attempted: 139/155
  • Field goal percentage: 89.7%
  • Longest field goal: 59 yards
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GREENVILLE, S.C. — Madison Booker scored a career-best 31 points to power No. 3 Texas to the SEC Tournament title game for the second straight year after the Longhorns defeated Ole Miss 85-68 on Saturday in the semifinals.

Booker also had 11 rebounds, five assists, three steals and two blocks in a do-it-all performance for the Longhorns (30-3). Texas also got 19 points and eight rebounds from Kyla Oldacre in an off-the-bench effort, and 14 points from Jordan Lee.

“Minus the turnovers, she was spectacular,” Texas coach Vic Schaefer said. “She was really special today. I know she’s made some big shots for us, but she really took over the game today.”

Ole Miss (23-11) was led by Cotie McMahon and Denim DeShields, who each had 20 points apiece. Christeen Iwuala chipped in 12 points.

The Rebels trailed by as much as 17 points after a sluggish start and were down by 10 at halftime. But in the third quarter, Latasha Lattimore and DeShields combined for 17 points to power an Ole Miss scoring surge as they outscored the Longhorns 23-15 in that frame. DeShields swished a corner 3-pointer at the buzzer at the end of the third quarter to cut Texas’ lead down to just two points.

But Ole Miss never got any closer. Texas used a 10-2 run in the early stages of the fourth quarter to put some cushion between itself and the Rebels. Booker — a native of Ridgeland, Mississippi — scored 13 points in the fourth quarter on 5-of-6 shooting to close the door on Ole Miss.

‘I feel like every time Book plays us, it’s personal, because she’s from the state. Sometimes I don’t want to even shake her hand because I’m like, ‘Why you went there? You could have did this with us,” Ole Miss coach Yolett McPhee-McCuin said with a laugh. ‘She’s just a special talent. … I thought she did a good job just getting comfortable. They do a good job of finding those spots for her, a short corner. Then once she sees it goes in, then she’ll occasionally shoot a three. I think it makes her very difficult to guard.’

Texas outscored Ole Miss 44-33 in the paint and also knocked down 19-of-22 free throws. Oldacre made an impressive 11-of-13 from the foul line, a career-high for her in made free throws in a game.

South Carolina awaits Texas in the SEC Championship, which tips off at 3 p.m. ET on ESPN on Sunday.

Third Quarter: Texas 57, Ole Miss 55

The Rebels have narrowed the gap with the Longhorns heading into the fourth quarter after outscoring them 23-15 in the third.

Latasha Lattimore scored eight points and Denim DeShields had nine points in the third frame to power Ole Miss. Cotie McMahon has 18 points so far to lead the Rebels, while Madison Booker has 18 for Texas.

Halftime: Texas 42, Ole Miss 32

Madison Booker has 12 points and Jordan Lee has seven as the Longhorns lead the Rebels by double figures at halftime.

Cotie McMahon has 16 points for Ole Miss, but the Rebels have been hampered by 11 turnovers and an inability to defend Texas inside. The Longhorns are outscoring the Rebels 30-14 in the paint.

First Quarter: Texas 22, Ole Miss 16

Despite 10 points from Cotie McMahon, the Rebels trailed the Longhorns at the end of the opening period of the SEC Tournament semifinals on Saturday in Greenville, South Carolina.

Madison Booker is powering Texas with eight points. The Longhorns have scored all of their points in the paint. Texas also has four steals and three blocks so far.

What time is Texas vs. Ole Miss?

  • Date: Saturday, March 7
  • Time: 7 p.m. ET
  • Location: Bon Secours Wellness Arena (Greenville, South Carolina)

Coach Yo’s Ole Miss Rebels face Vic Schaefer’s Texas Longhorns in the semifinals of the SEC Women’s Tournament at 7 p.m. ET Saturday, March 7 in Greenville, South Carolina.

Texas vs. Ole Miss: TV, streaming

  • TV: ESPN2
  • Stream: ESPN+, SlingTV

Ole Miss and Texas’ game will air live on ESPN2. Streaming options for the game include Sling TV.

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